Social Action for Women?
Public Interest Litigation in India's Supreme Court
Modhurima Dasgupta
Department of Sociology
Brown University
modhurima@yahoo.co
Abstract
The Indian Supreme Court claims
Public Interest Litigation can and does effectively protect the
rights of women. This is said to be accomplished through a number
of innovations, the most important being an extremely liberal
interpretation of the Constitution's fundamental rights to life and
equality (read to include gender equality and life with individual
dignity and liberty), and the relaxation of the rules of standing.
This allows those persons or groups not personally involved in
cases to bring suit on behalf of others. India has pioneered this
system, and I argue that though the court is limited in its
abilities to promote and create social change, it's efforts in this
unique endeavour have led to a greater awareness of women's issues
and also an increase in gender based social action. Along with
discussions on issues surrounding the practice of public interest
litigation, its history, and past policy and legislation on women,
I examine in detail, cases that have come to the Indian Supreme
Court as Public Interest Litigations regarding certain crucial
issues effecting women. Specifically, I focus this study on the
areas of rape, sexual harassment, and prostitution. This paper
results from a year of fieldwork in India, and relies on interviews
with activists, scholars, petitioners, and legal professionals as
well as extensive archival work.
Keywords:India, Women, Public Interest Litigation, Social
Action, Judicial Activismn.
This is a Refereed article
published on 8 November 2002.
Citation:Dasgupta M,
'Social Action for Women? Public Interest Litigation in India's
Supreme Court', Law, Social Justice & Global Development
Journal (LGD) 2002 (1)
<http://elj.warwick.ac.uk/global/02-1/dasgupta.html>. New
citation as at 1/1/04:
<http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/lgd/2002_1/dasgupta/>
.
1.
Introduction
In March of 1972, a sixteen year old girl
named Mathura was taken to the neighbourhood police station by her
brother and some other members of her family. They were concerned
because she was underage and attempting to elope with her
boyfriend. They wanted abduction charges brought against him. The
two policemen in the station asked to talk to Mathura alone while
they took her statement. The two officers then raped her while her
family waited outside.
More than two years later, a sessions judge
acquitted the two accused on the grounds that Mathura was a
'shocking liar' who was already 'habituated to sexual intercourse,'
and so could not prove that she did not give consent. On appeal,
the Bombay High Court reversed the previous order, and sentenced
the two officers each to six years in prison. And finally in 1979,
the Supreme Court overturned the High Court's decision, saying that
she had not struggled enough or caused enough of a commotion, and
so could not prove that she did not consent. The evidence for the
case had been collected through the police station in which the
crime had been committed. The outcome of the case caused uproar in
India. A slew of protests helped raise demands for more stringent
rape laws, and caused the Government of India to enact the Criminal
Law Amendment of 1983, which significantly amended the rape section
of the Indian Penal Code. More importantly, the furore surrounding
the case ruling helped to create the Indian anti-rape campaign,
which has been the most influential movement for women's rights in
India (Epp, 1998, Sen, 1998,
Kishwar, 1999, Kumar, 1999).
The most significant result of the Mathura
case[1], however, was the realisation on the
part of many of the justices on the Supreme Court of India that
social justice for women had to become one of its key priorities.
The final ruling in the Mathura case in 1979 coincided nicely with
a new direction that the court was taking; it was in the early
stages of the newly developed practice of public interest
litigation. The Indian Supreme Court's practice of this form of
litigation joined with the new realisation that the Court should
take an active interest in the rights of women, helped to create a
new venue for social action for the women of India.
India has used both the legislative and
judicial systems to advance legal innovations that espouse women's
rights, human rights and social justice. This article examines how
the higher judiciary has utilised its powers, in particular through
public interest litigation, to encourage change for women. The
inclusion of gender, or more specifically, of women as a
development issue is especially salient in the Indian case. Women
in India have historically been particularly disadvantaged in a
number of different ways. For instance, India has for many years
had the dubious distinction of having one of the lowest female to
male ratios in the world, outdoing even Bangladesh, China, and
Sub-Saharan Africa in this respect. Most development literature on
India currently includes at least some mention of the appalling
degree of 'female disadvantage'. This is a catchall classification
that usually includes illiteracy, low levels of education,
healthcare, life expectancy, status, and autonomy. These levels are
low compared to women in most of the rest of the world and in
relation to Indian men. In the pursuit of higher levels of
socio-economic development in the Indian context, the uplift of
women has long been an important and notable consideration by the
Indian government, The United Nations, The World Bank, and most
NGOs. The Indian Supreme Court has also participated in these
efforts, particularly in its practice of public interest
litigation.
The Supreme Court of India has touted Public
Interest Litigation (PIL), also sometimes called Social Action
Litigation (Baxi, 1987), as an effective tool
for protecting the rights of the disadvantaged, especially women.
While this litigation is the judicial equivalent of class action
suits in the United States, there are important differences. The
Indian Court specifically has focused on the fundamental rights to
life and equality. Fundamental rights guaranteed to all Indian
citizens include life and equality. The Supreme Court has
interpreted these two rights to include the right to gender
equality and the right to live with individual dignity and liberty.
Procedurally, the Court's practice of PIL has relaxed the rules of
'standing'. It has effectively allowed persons or groups not
personally involved in cases to bring suit on behalf of others,
which makes for greater openness of the system.
India has pioneered this form of litigation, and I argue that PIL
does give effective access to the Court and with that a public
'voice' to groups and individuals with neither the education nor
the economic means to use the legal system to their own benefit.
Even though the Court's rulings are not always directly
enforceable, it is of consequence that the Indian Supreme Court has
undertaken gender equality cases as matters of public interest.
Historically, gender discrimination in India has been both de jure
and de facto. The Court, as far as it is able, has aided
tremendously in eliminating legal forms of discrimination against
women. Substantive justice remains elusive, but with the rulings of
the Court and its social influence, significant strides are being
made. Though courts are limited in their abilities to promote and
bring about social change, I argue that this Court's efforts have
led to greater awareness of certain women's issues and an increase
in gender-based social action and activism.
2 . What is
Public Interest Litigation?
Where a legal wrong or a legal injury is
caused to a person or to a determinate class of persons...and such
a person or determinate class of persons is by reason of poverty,
helplessness or disability or socially or economically
disadvantaged position, unable to approach the court for relief,
any member of the public can maintain an application for
appropriate direction…(Justice Bhagwati [as he then was] in
S.P. Gupta v. Union of India).
The Indian Supreme Court thus took what seemed
to be merely a dismal social problem - lack of access to justice by
the poor and oppressed - and used that problem as the springboard
for an ingenious answer: to build upon the strong Indian tradition
of voluntary social action by empowering volunteer representatives
to approach the court on behalf of the poor and oppressed (Cunningham, 1987, 499).
In India, the term 'public interest
litigation' carries with it a specific meaning. It refers to cases
in which the Supreme Court or a High Court allows volunteer lawyers
or citizen petitioners to bring a case on behalf of some victimised
group that does not have sufficient means or access to legal
services. The procedure is a simple one. A letter must be written
and sent to the Supreme Court. Cases are financed completely by
legal aid organisations and public interest advocates. In the past,
beneficiary groups have included prisoners, injured farm workers,
the homeless, the Bhopal Union Carbide disaster survivors, victims
of police brutality, residents of women's shelters, and many
others. Frequently, it is the court that actively invites (or
induces) the cases to be brought to court, and in most cases there
is no active involvement by the victims or would-be beneficiaries.
Others have also engaged in initiating these cases, including
professors, journalists, lawyers, and other citizen
activists.
Public interest litigation is unique in that
it promotes a proactive judiciary, and takes on large questions of
policy (a rarity in the Indian legal professions). Inspired by the
realisation that law was quickly becoming a profit-driven
profession, and that most of India's citizens could not afford
legal representation, Justices Bhagwati and Krishna Iyer of the
Supreme Court submitted a report on national juridicare in 1977,
recommending the need for an extraordinary form of litigation. It
was tailored specifically for the needs of India's people. This was
the beginning of public interest litigation, and it has flourished
ever since. Typically, this form of litigation addresses the
national government's commitments to social welfare and aid to
subordinate groups.
In 1977, immediately following India's
two-year period of Emergency Rule[2], Justices
Bhagwati and Krishna Iyer came forward with a recommendation for
PIL. Some have argued that this was a direct response to the
legitimation crisis suffered by the Indian government in the
post-emergency period[3]. However, Rajeev Dhavan
argues that this type of thinking was the fruit of an overdue
'alliance of protest and thinking' among India's disadvantaged
groups and its growing bevy of middle class intellectuals (Dhavan, 1994, 306)[4]. In the
initial stages of PIL, the court listened to cases brought by
almost anyone complaining of any injustice. That has now changed[5], but what did come out of that trend was the
liberalisation of the rules of standing or locus standi.
The relaxation of these rules[6] is perhaps one of the most unique facets of
Indian PIL, and it is instructive to look at how the same doctrine
has operated in America. Known in the US as the doctrine of
'standing,' locus standi rests squarely between the interests of
the traditional private model of law and the public interest model.
American law operates under the assumption that only those with a
personal stake in a matter can be sufficiently motivated to present
a good case to the court (Cassels, 1989,
498). In fact, the United States Supreme Court routinely uses the
doctrine of standing to reject public interest lawsuits[7], while in India the Supreme Court has
quite consciously gone about relaxing the locus standi rules so
that more PIL cases can be heard. This liberalised version of
standing has been termed 'representative standing', and it allows
any citizen to petition on behalf of another individual or
group.
Clark Cunningham points out that
representative standing can, in fact, be viewed as a
'creative expansion of the well-accepted
standing exception which allows a third party to file a habeas
corpus petition on the ground that the injured party…cannot
approach the court himself' (Cunningham,
1987, 499).
The creativity is found in the extension of
standing to represent people who were not simply physically
restrained, but were realistically not 'free' to use the legal
system because of socio-economic factors[8]. Within Indian PIL
there are actually two types of standing that are considered
legitimate by the courts. The second form - citizen standing - is,
like representative standing, also a modification of the
traditional doctrine of locus standi. One who petitions under
citizen standing does not sue only as a representative of others,
but is suing for the good of the public (Cunningham, 1987, 501). The reason for
having citizen standing at all is not to serve the poor or
disadvantaged, but to defend rights that are so 'diffused' among
the general public that there are no applicable individual rights
or laws that would otherwise cover them. Some issues that these
cases have covered include the president's power to transfer
judges, foreign adoptions of Indian children, limestone quarrying
and its environmental impacts, and gas leaks from a chemical plant
(Antony, 1993, Vishnupriya, 1995)[9].
In examining an institution that is created by
an elite judiciary in order to assist subordinated groups in
society, it is crucial to look at which groups actually initiate,
which negotiate, and which eventually benefit (Galanter, 1974, 1994). In its two decades of existence,
PIL petitions are overwhelmingly written by elites. They are most
often lawyers, judges, scholars, journalists, social activists and
activist organizations. Several of the organisations involved have
been receiving grants from various sources for the express purpose
of filing writ petitions on behalf of the disadvantaged. There are
many individuals and organizations that have been petitioners in
more than one case, indicating perhaps that they see this process
and its results as a useful way of action.
It must be noted, however, that the courts
have entertained numerous letters, telegrams, and even postcards
from the poor or disabled, and have sometimes even treated
anonymous letters as writ petitions (Cassels,
1989, 499, Vishnupriya, 1995, 87).
The court has also declared that the rights of petitioners (who
bring action on behalf of others) are subordinate to the
'interests' of the beneficiaries of the action. In addition, as PIL
is not a form of private litigation, the petitioner in these cases
is not allowed the right to withdraw proceedings at any time. The
court also serves a different purpose in such cases. It not only
hands down a judgement of compensation, but it is also (and more
importantly) concerned with correctives for the future. The court
has often taken upon itself the responsibilities for organising
proceedings, designing a relief plan and also overseeing its
implementation, and sending assigned officials to periodically
check on the progress of its remedies (Juneja,
1993, 82).
It is clearly difficult to make a process such
as PIL a widespread one (or a non-elite one, for that matter) when
the majority of the population is illiterate. One must also
question even the possibility of PIL becoming a widespread
phenomenon considering the size and capacity of the courts.
Theoretically, the possibility does exist due to the sheer
simplicity of the process. At the same time, some abuses have
occurred because of this simplicity. Initially, when PIL first
caught on, there were countless frivolous cases brought to court
because of a willingness on the part of judges to give attention to
anyone using the new system (Dhavan, 1994,
306). This has been reduced significantly now, and the system has
been amended in order to deal with other problems that have arisen
as well. For instance, at its inception PIL letters or petitions
would go straight to the judges to whom they were addressed, and
those judges would then choose whether or not to hear the case.
This caused problems, however, because it is not acceptable to let
petitioners choose judges for their own lawsuits. As a result, a
special cell of the Supreme Court was created for the handling of
all PIL letters and petitions, even the ones addressed to specific
judges. The Public Interest Litigation Cell sorts through all the
letters, and then puts the viable petitions in the hands of the
Chief Justice, who then assigns a justice to each case (Vishnupriya, 1995, 93). This is similar to
how all non-PIL cases are handled in the Supreme Court as
well.
PIL is not confined to the jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court. If the petition points to a 'legal wrong,' then it
should be dealt with at the level of the state High Courts. If a
'fundamental right' has allegedly been violated, then the petition
may go to either the High Court of the state or directly to the
Supreme Court under article 32[10] or the
Constitution (Cassels, 1989, 498). This is
discussed in detail later on.
The very openness of PIL can lead to problems
in the relations between the courts and other branches of
government as well as the process of politics. Former Chief Justice
P.N. Bhagwati has enumerated certain limiting criteria for PIL
cases that seek to address these issues. The courts must work
within the following confines: For one thing, it must be
demonstrated to the court that the petitioner is acting in a bona
fide manner, and not for any sort of personal gain, private profit,
political motivation, or any other ulterior motive. Furthermore,
the court cannot allow its process to be abused by politicians or
others in order to postpone legitimate administrative action, or in
an attempt to gain a political objective. Finally, the judiciary
must be careful not to overstep the bounds of its functions into
the territories of the executive and legislative branches of
government (Juneja, 1993, 78). Such
precautions must be taken in order to protect PIL from its own
openness to access.
It is important to note also that PIL was very
much a creation of the more liberal justices of the Supreme Court,
namely Justice Bhagwati and Justice Krishna Iyer, and that it has
faced harsh criticism from many, including the more conservative
justices on the bench. It is quite clear that the harshest critics
are those who conceive of the judicial role as much narrower than
what is customary in PIL.
The court has been charged not only with
exceeding its institutional capacity, but with reversing
constitutional priorities, usurping both legislative and
administrative functions, violating the rule of law, riding
roughshod over traditional rights and succumbing to the corrupting
temptations of power (Cassels, 1989,
509).
Jamie Cassels goes on to argue that this
dynamic new form of judicial activism is best understood as an
attempt at retrieving legitimacy in the post-Emergency period. PIL
is thus seen as a move to gain public support and acquire a more
prominent space in Indian society. Rajeev Dhavan, on the other
hand, would consider this reorientation to be part and parcel of
'the alliance of protest and thinking' discussed earlier. Either
way, it is an expansion of judicial power that helps to serve the
interests of disadvantaged groups in society.
3 . Past Policy
and Legislation on Women
Once the British had established themselves as
the colonial rulers of India, they introduced the British system of
courts including their rules, procedures, and court hierarchies.
This helped to move India slowly away from the laws of traditional,
local customs as well as from Hindu and Muslim personal laws.
Though initially the British had espoused non-interference in
personal matters, not surprisingly, once they had been in India a
good while, the colonial rulers became more comfortable with the
notion of 'interference'.
'Through their interventions the Hindu society
could rid itself of its 'barbarism' and enter an era of
'civilization.' An image of the cruel and superstitious natives who
needed Christian salvation was deliberately constructed by the
Evangelists' (Agnes, 2000, 46).
Thus began an era of colonial legislation
designed to 'civilise' the Indians through law. This effort of the
colonial power began with a number of issues that are of special
interest to women, such as rights within the home and especially
those related to marriage. In the first half of the nineteenth
century, Hindu social reformers such as Raja Ram Mohan Roy also
fought for laws prohibiting the practice of Sati[11], the acceptance of a widow's right to remarry,
and the abolition of dowry. The combination of both these forces
led to changes via judicial decisions as well as legislation. The
first of these was Lord Bentnick's Sati Regulation Act of 1829. The
Widow Remarriage Act was passed in 1856, and soon after that came
the Age of Consent Act of 1860, followed by the Prohibition of
Female Infanticide Act of 1872 (Manohar,
1999, Agnes, 2000).
Yet, the issues that were controversial in the
legislative and judicial arenas centuries or even decades before
are clearly not of primary concern to legislators, jurists, and
women's rights activists of today. The contemporary Indian Women's
Movement is strong, and has asserted its voice in how women's
issues are dealt with in the highest echelons of the Indian state.
In the last few decades, the Indian anti-rape campaign has been the
most influential movement for women's rights in India (Gangoli, 1998, 128). This movement began from a
slew of protests against the Indian Supreme Court's ruling in the
now infamous Mathura rape case of 1979 discussed in the
introduction; these protests were eventually instrumental in
bringing about substantial changes in India's rape laws[12].
The following sections examine how public
interest litigation is used by the Indian Supreme Court in order to
fulfil its promise to aid in the amelioration of the lives of
Indian women. This commitment is reflected consistently in the
Court's PIL decisions on matters involving women. This can be seen
through its rulings on various issues. I choose here to examine the
Court's record on rape, sexual harassment, and sex workers. One of
the outcomes of these gender-related judgements has been the order
for and subsequent creation of the National Commission for Women
(NCW). I include a brief discussion of the NCW here as
well.
4 . The Court
Today
In its efforts to create positive changes for
the status of women, the Supreme Court must first find a
constitutional violation before taking on any public interest case.
Most often it is the violation of fundamental rights that allows
the Court entrée into a gender-related issue. Fundamental
rights guaranteed by the constitution that are relevant for public
interest cases relating to gender are few, but of great import.
These rights provide for equality before the law and equal
protection before the law. Discrimination on the grounds of
religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth is expressly
prohibited. In addition, the protection of life and personal
property are guaranteed. This issue has been interpreted extremely
liberally by the Supreme Court to include life with dignity as a
fundamental right. Trafficking in human beings and forced labour
are also prohibited, as is the employment of children in hazardous
situations - this rule is often applied to the dangers of child
prostitution as well. It is in the interest of protecting the
aforementioned fundamental rights that most gender-related PIL
cases are accepted by the Supreme Court as within its
jurisdiction[13].
Supreme Court judgements in PIL cases have not
only been influential in promoting awareness about women's issues,
but have also been instrumental in the creation of policy and
organisations devoted to women's development initiatives. It was in
the early 1990's that the Supreme Court ordered the creation of the
National Commission for Women (NCW) under the National Commission
for Women Act of 1990. By January of 1992, the Commission was
functioning at what the government deemed full capacity. The NCW
has as its main mission the guarantee of 'speedy justice' to women.
The Commission consists of a chairperson, five members, and a
member secretary. They are all nominated by the Central Government,
and are put in place in order to protect the rights and interests
of Indian women. The Commission's mandated activities include the
review of laws having to do with women, interventions and
investigations of specific complaints of atrocities, and remedial
action when it is appropriate.
The NCW is particularly active in organising
Parivrik Mahila Lok Adalats (local courts for resolutions of
problems - specifically for women) through the help of NGOs all
over the country. The Commission reports that over the last year,
20 of these were held in twelve of the 25 states. They have also
launched legal awareness programs for women, including 160 programs
at colleges and many regional literacy camps in which the
Commission claims 50,000 women were educated in the past year
alone. In investigating complaints of violence, the Commission
mainly deals with cases of rape, gang rape, and various other forms
of violence committed against poor tribal and village women. In
1997, the NCW organised a national conference of all the State Home
Ministers in order to discuss issues of violence against women and
the adoption of newer, more stringent measures against perpetrators
of such violence. In addition, the Commission has sponsored a major
study on employment of tribal women in the light of a changing
economy. It has also carried out studies on the sexual exploitation
of children. This led to another 1997 national conference, the
National Consultation on Sexual Exploitation of Children. All
findings from the aforementioned studies and conferences were then
reviewed by the NCW and sent on to the Government of India for
further action.
Under the auspices of the Supreme Court, the
NCW has set up several programs to assess the way in which law
enforcement treats women. Sensitivity training has been given to
numerous police departments, urging greater implementation of laws
that are in place for the benefit of women. The Commission has
established schemes for appropriate custodial justice for female
prisoners, and the release and rehabilitation upon release of women
from prisons.
Rehabilitation is also provided for
prostitutes and their children, and for widows along with proper
support for the land rights of widows. The elimination of dowry
practices is a further concern for the Commission. It routinely
considers complaints lodged by women and their families who have
had unlawful dowry demands made on them. Such demands are often
accompanied by threats of violence. Other common complaints have to
do with torture, desertion, bigamy, rape, employment
discrimination, domestic violence, and incest. Indeed, it is the
Complaints Cell/Counselling Cell that is considered a core unit of
the Commission. Both written and oral complaints are accepted
regarding any 'deprivation of women's rights, non implementation of
laws enacted to provide protection to women, non compliance of
policy decisions, guidelines or instructions aimed at mitigating
hardships to women and taking up issues arising out of such matters
with appropriate authorities' (Ministry of Human Resources,
GOI).
5 .
Rape
Incidences of rape are extremely high among
women in the 'weaker sections'. The Supreme Court does vividly
acknowledge the plight of many Indian women by stating that they
often live their lives 'at the mercy' of their employers and the
police and are therefore especially susceptible to violence and
intimidation by men[14]. Many of the rape cases
that have been handled as PIL cases are of an extreme nature[15], and have led the Supreme Court to indicate
broad parameters in assisting the survivors of rape. Often, the
Court has stepped in due to lapses on the parts of the Central
government or the appropriate state governments to provide
rehabilitation and compensatory justice. With the police often
sympathetic to the perpetrators of rape and a broader social
climate that accepts and perpetuates the notion that women should
live their lives at the service of men, it is close to impossible
for women in India to get justice in cases of sexual violence. The
Supreme Court has ruled regularly in PIL cases that deal with such
issues, and it has, in general, sided with the rights of women. The
Court does actively pursue methods of redress and is supportive of
groups designed to aid in the prevention of and treatment of such
issues.
In cases of violence against women or in other
cases dealing with deprivation of the rights of women, the Supreme
Court routinely elicits the NCW to engage in the evaluation of
legislation dealing with women. The Court also counts on the
Commission to come up with recommendations for just compensation
and rehabilitation for female crime victims. The Supreme Court has
written in Delhi Domestic Working Women's Forum vs. Union of India
& Others [1994(4) SCALE 608], that it is necessary to ensure
the protection of women by the National Commission for Women due to
the high incidence of violence against women of especially poor
socio-economic status and women who belong to disadvantaged
minority groups. These victims usually have neither the time nor
the means to secure justice for themselves using the civil court
system, and it is for the sake of women belonging to the 'weaker
sections' of the population that the Commission has been
established.
The Delhi Domestic Working Women's Forum case
is important for several other reasons as well. The victims of this
crime were very poor tribal women from the state of Bihar. These
four domestic workers were brutally raped by seven army officers
while travelling on a train from Ranchi in Bihar to Delhi. The
petition was brought to the Supreme Court by a group representing
female domestic workers in Delhi. The Supreme Court in its
judgement described the women as 'helpless…at the mercy of
the employers and police'. At one point during the case, the
lawyers could not find the women at all, though there had been some
indication that they were somewhere in Uttar Pradesh. The Supreme
Court issued directions to the State of Uttar Pradesh to help find
them, but the state's police did not cooperate. In a ruling in the
P. Rathinam versus State of Gujarat[16] case
(another rape matter), the Court also complained that the State of
Gujarat and its police forces had been completely uncooperative in
carrying out its orders. One of the most frustrating problems that
the Court faces in the implementation of its judgements, especially
in cases related to sexual harassment or assault, is the lack of
cooperation from the states and state police. The Court did
acknowledge that it is rare that women in such situations can
secure justice through the civil courts, even though the Indian
Penal Code and the Indian Evidence Act had both been amended in
this regard. The Court also went on to ask the NCW to draft a plan
to help remedy this and to impress upon the Union of India to put
such plan into action immediately.
Compensation to victims of sexual assault is a
practice which has gained much recent attention due to a ruling
handed down by the Supreme Court in January of 2000[17]. In this case, a ruling by the Calcutta High
Court was upheld in which it ordered Rs.10 lakh (one million rupees
or roughly $22,000 at the time of the award) in compensation to a
Bangladeshi tourist who was gangraped by railway employees at
Howrah railway station in Calcutta. This money was actually paid
out by the Union of India because the railway workers were
employees of the Indian government and they committed their crime
on national railway property under the pretence of helping the
victim confirm her ticket. The PIL was filed by an advocate in
Calcutta who argued that the Bangladeshi woman (an elected
representative in her home country) was entitled to some form of
compensation because of the violation of the constitutional
guarantee of 'right to life with dignity' even though she was the
citizen of another country. The Supreme Court agreed that all
people on Indian land are entitled to the same fundamental rights
as any Indian citizen unless there is somehow a breach of national
security involved.
6 . Sexual
Harassment
When it comes to sexual harassment, the Indian
Supreme Court has only dealt with the issue directly in one PIL
case, and that has turned out to be a landmark decision. Popularly
referred to as the Vishaka decision, Vishaka and Others versus
State of Rajasthan and Others[18], became the
very first case in India in which the Supreme Court declared sexual
harassment in the workplace to be unconstitutional. The decision
was handed down in 1997 by a three-justice bench including Chief
Justice J.S. Verma, Justice Sujata V. Manohar, and Justice B.N.
Kirpal. Justices Verma and Manohar are currently members of the
National Human Rights Commission; Justice Verma is chairperson. In
conversations with both Justices, each mentioned to me that the
Vishaka judgement was one of their proudest moments on the
bench.
The Vishaka case was brought to the Supreme
Court in the form of a writ petition filed by several social
activists and NGOs spurred on by the brutal gang rape of a female
social worker in a Rajasthani village. Chief Justice Verma
delivered the court's judgement. The specific complaint on the gang
rape was turned over to a criminal court. However, his opinion did
hold that sexual harassment in the workplace is a violation of the
fundamental rights of 'gender equality' and 'the right to life and
liberty' under articles 14, 15, and 21 of the constitution. In
addition, he found that article 19 (1) (g), which protects the
right to 'practise any profession or to carry out any occupation,
trade or business,' is also violated when there is an incident of
sexual harassment. Justice Verma states that the fundamental right
guaranteed in article 19 depends on the assumption of a 'safe'
working environment. He also goes on to explain that
the:
'primary responsibility for ensuring such
safety and dignity through suitable legislation, and the creation
of a mechanism for its enforcement, is of the legislature and the
executive'.
However, when cases of sexual harassment
violate the fundamental rights of women workers under the
constitution, and are brought before the Court for redress under
Article 32, it is the duty of the Supreme Court to do what the
legislature should have done in the first place - provide some
guidelines for the protection of these rights. Justice Verma's
guidelines are written with regard to the definition of 'human
rights' as set out in the Protection of Human Rights Act of 1993.
He takes specific note of the fact that currently (this was written
in 1997), India's civil and penal laws 'do not adequately provide'
any protection for women against sexual harassment at work. He goes
on to argue that it would take a good deal of time to put such
legislation on the books, and that is precisely why the Supreme
Court must set out useful guidelines so that employers and other
responsible persons or institutions may begin to observe such rules
to aid in the prevention of any future sexual harassment of women
in the workplace.
Guidelines set out by the ruling actually
require quite a bit from Indian employers. The first duty of
employers is set to be the prevention or deterrence of acts of
sexual harassment followed by the provision of procedures for the
resolution, settlement or prosecution of such acts. Employers
should notify, publish, and circulate in appropriate ways to their
employees that sexual harassment is expressly prohibited. In
addition
'appropriate work conditions should be
provided in respect of work, leisure, health and hygiene to further
ensure that there is no hostile environment towards women at
workplaces and no woman employee should have reasonable grounds to
believe that she is disadvantaged in connection with her
employment.'
Moreover, there are also procedures spelled
out for criminal proceedings, disciplinary action, as well as
provisions for a 'complaints mechanism' and 'complaint
committee'.
7 . Sex Workers
and Their Children
The Constitution of India specifically
prohibits trafficking in human beings and forced labour of
virtually any kind[19]. Article 23 derives from the framers'
intention to not just prohibit slavery, but also to include in that
classification the 'traffic in women or children or the crippled,
for immoral or other purposes' (Basu, 1997,
110-111). In 1956 the Suppression of Immoral Traffic in Women and
Girls Act was put into effect. This law was geared toward punishing
three main offences:
1) profiting from the prostitution of another
person;
2) the exploitation of another for the purpose
of prostitution; and
3) soliciting in public spaces.
In 1986 the same act was renamed the Immoral
Traffic (Prevention) Act and was amended to reflect a shift in
emphasis from suppression to prevention. In reviews of the original
act by the Law Commission and others it was generally agreed that
penalizing prostitutes themselves could not be effective. It is
universally recognized in the Indian context that most women
involved in prostitution are either physically forced to
participate in such activity or are driven to it by extreme
financial need. Therefore, it would be ineffective for instance, to
punish family members (especially children or the elderly) who are
supported by a prostitute's income (as the 1956 law would have
required). The key now is to prevent women from having to turn to
prostitution as the only way to support themselves and their
families, and also to rehabilitate those who have been sex workers
in the past. What is currently punishable derives from the newly
formed definition of prostitution, which is 'sexual exploitation or
abuse of a person for commercial purposes' (as cited in Sarkar, 1988, 49).
Through social action litigation, the Supreme
Court has dealt with prostitution-related cases (though there have
been very few at this level) in what can aptly be described as a
very sympathetic manner. It should be noted however, that the
judgements are sometimes written by the justices in rather
paternalistic and old-fashioned tones, often verging on the banal.
A glaring example of this is found in Justice Ramaswamy's 1997
musings from Gaurav Jain versus Union of India and
Others.
'Frailty, thy name is woman,' was the ignominy
heaped upon women of [the] Victorian Era [sic] by William
Shakespeare in his great work Hamlet. The history of sociology has,
however, established the contrary, i.e., 'fortitude,' thy name is
woman; 'caress,' thy name is woman; 'self-sacrifice,' thy name is
woman; tenacity and successful pursuit, their apathetical [sic] is
woman…[The petitioner Gaurav Jain seeks] improvement of the
plight of the unfortunate fallen women and their progeny [1997(4)
SCALE 657].
The troubling concept of 'rehabilitation
through marriage' as a remedy for prostitution also seems to come
up repeatedly in the judgements. Viewed in a more positive light,
it is the Court's reliance on rehabilitation as the best way to
deal with sex workers rather than incarceration that makes this a
common feature in their rulings. In fact, most PIL cases that come
to the Supreme Court involving sex workers are those that deal
mainly with protective homes that have been set up to aid in their
rehabilitation. Unfortunately, protective homes are often found to
be in dreadful conditions and seem to ignore the laws under which
they were created. In Dr. Upendra Baxi versus State of Uttar
Pradesh and Another[20], the Supreme Court
bench writes in its ruling that the Agra Protective Home was formed
in order to accommodate women who are trying to leave prostitution.
However, upon close inspection it was found that the home was
actually housing women with tuberculosis, venereal diseases, and
developmental disabilities. There were no sex workers there at
all.
In addition, there have been cases in which
the petitioner is really asking the Court to consider the plight of
the children of sex workers, not the sex workers themselves. In the
Indian context the children of sex workers often live lives of
segregation from other children. They are considered socially
unacceptable in a society that defines most people by what kinds of
families they come from. Most of these children have no knowledge
of their fathers, have mothers who are known sex workers, and are
often raised in red light communities. In the Gaurav Jain case
mentioned above, Mr. Jain was seeking the creation of separate
schools for the children of sex workers. His petition was accepted
and the case heard by two justices who found his concerns to be
genuine and important, but his ideas on how to achieve normalcy and
social acceptance for these children to be deficient. The bench in
this case ruled that the children should be put into regular
schools with other children and provided with housing in the school
hostels so that they may pursue their educations away from what
must surely be the horrors of their mothers' everyday lives.
Justice Ramaswamy stressed in his opinion the importance of
having
'the children overcome the disabilities from
foul atmosphere(s) and to generate the feeling of oneness and
dissegregation had' .
This was put in as an interim order with
directions given to an NGO to subsequently look into how the
process was working for the kids put into such programs.
In fact, it was also a Supreme Court PIL
decision in 1990 that brought out the taboo subject of child
prostitution as an issue for national public concern, and
eventually caused international organizations such as UNICEF to pay
attention to the magnitude of the problem. The Court's ruling
ordered the State and Central Governments to implement
rehabilitation and education schemes for children who have been
involved in prostitution, and also to take steps toward the
eventual eradication of child prostitution as a whole. As a direct
result of this landmark PIL decision, a Central Advisory Committee
has been formed to work toward the elimination of child
prostitution. A subcommittee has also been constituted for the
purpose of planning and making policy recommendations on how to
best rescue and then rehabilitate all children found to be involved
in prostitution. Both committee reports were submitted and
considered. Regional consultations were then ordered and completed
with aid from UNICEF in the major metropolitan areas of Calcutta,
Goa, Hyderabad, Patna, Chandigarh, and Bangalore[21].
8 . Other
Cases
In addition to the matters discussed above,
there have also been several other crucial women's issues taken up
by the court. Some of these are not by any means considered to be
landmark decisions, but do demonstrate a willingness on the part of
the higher judiciary to give time and access to many women who have
nowhere else to turn. For instance, in 1986 the Court issued
directions in a matter that involved women who sell vegetables on
the streets of Ahmedabad. It ruled that the Municipal Corporation
of Ahmedabad had to issue licenses to women to sell vegetables in
any location where they had previously been selling, and also to
give legal costs and funds to the Self Employed Women's Association
(SEWA) for the establishment of a joint account between SEWA and
the Municipal Corporation to be used for the 'purpose of welfare of
these women vegetable vendors in mutual consultation' [1986(2)
SCALE 1254].
In a 1987 dowry case, Sarita versus Delhi
Administration and Others, a woman wrote a letter to the Supreme
Court when her husband's family started demanding money from her
two months after they were married. She wrote that her life had
been threatened, she could not afford a lawyer, and the Delhi
Police refused to help. The Court took up the matter and issued
notice to the Commissioner of Police in Delhi giving him one week
to conduct an inquiry and get back to the Court with the results.
He was also instructed to provide the petitioner with all
'necessary and adequate' police protection [1987(1) SCALE 403]. In
an order dated exactly seven days from the date of the original
order, we find that the Delhi Police actually did exactly what they
were told and that appropriate action was in process. Sarita, who
was present at the ruling, then asked the court for legal aid and
the Delhi District Legal Aid and Advice Board was directed to
provide aid to her [1987(1) SCALE 555].
9 . Conclusions
and Analysis
Public interest litigation in India has
successfully opened spaces for women's empowerment and social
change. The cases I've discussed and their judgements are important
for several reasons, but the most significant contribution they
make is in setting precedent. Clearly, this is why the Supreme
Court of a nation of a billion citizens bothers to hear petitions
that have only to do with the lives of a few street vendors or one
woman dealing with dowry problems. The justices on the bench who
write these decisions speak of an active interest taken by the
Court in trying to fulfil the constitutional promise of promoting
socio-economic development. They consider a citizen's access to the
courts and justice to be part and parcel of any kind of social
development that a developing democracy has to offer. In
particular, the justices often mention helping the most
disadvantaged members of the population, and in that category they
often focus on women. It is no secret that women are especially
disadvantaged in all strata of Indian society. Indian women are
held down at home and in the workplace with equal fervour. Though
the Constitution promises equality of the sexes, this is nowhere
close to a reality. It must be noted again, however, that these
judgements are meant to and do go beyond the individuals involved.
They are decisions inspired by particular individuals, but written
in broad, sweeping terms in order to aid the public interest in
general. The relevance of these decisions is found, after all, in
their broader nature. By ruling in favour of one woman, the Court
is bringing national attention to the issues that many Indian women
are dealing with, while at the same time creating and protecting
national policy.
It must also be noted that whether rulings in
PIL cases are immediately enforceable or not, they do hold a great
deal of symbolic value. Change on a purely symbolic level is
crucial for the subsequent creation of real social transformation.
Precedent-setting rulings by the Supreme Court do set norms for
society. These decisions and the institutions they subsequently
create can accelerate the processes of change. It is a formal legal
statement that will eventually provide legitimacy for
transformations that may not occur instantaneously. From such legal
action, the foundation is laid for change that will become real in
the future[22]. Eventually, we trust, these
rulings will be implemented. Meanwhile, by writing these decisions,
the Court performs the significant function of creating
acceptability for new ideas and of keeping the issue alive, the
importance of which should not be underestimated.
Prior to the establishment of PIL in India,
the cases discussed here would in all probability have never made
it to the Supreme Court or any other higher court at all. Court
proceedings in India are notoriously slow. However, High Courts,
and especially the Supreme Court, are relatively fast and much more
effective and corruption-free than most of the lower courts in
India. It is crucial that women get their cases heard in higher
courts because lower courts are an especially dismal setting for
women. These courts often work under beliefs that dominate the
local cultures in which they operate, leaving any constitutional
concern for women's rights by the wayside. Thus, in order to have
some hope for justice, women must first get to courts that may be
sympathetic to their concerns. Access then, is the key, and the
Indian Supreme Court has made that part of the process
extraordinarily simple.
The Supreme Court's concern for women as well
as its attitude that the amelioration of the lives of women is an
especially vital component of Indian development (indeed, active
pursuit of socio-economic development is a constitutional guarantee
in India), are reflected consistently in the Court's public
interest rulings in matters involving women. The Court's
willingness to listen to cases involving women's issues and to
provide restitution when appropriate is a vital component of
India's evolving pursuit of development. Media coverage of
decisions is widespread, and the NGOs and civil liberties groups
that are most actively involved with the protection of women's
rights admit freely that their ideas of what social action they can
or should pursue are often influenced directly by Supreme Court
rulings. It is of special importance that the Court allows citizens
to petition on behalf of women who cannot. The backing of the Court
gives legitimacy and access, and thus, voice. Judiciaries alone do
not wield the power to create social change, but for the women of
India such direct access to the highest court in the land, the
policy it creates and protects, the legitimacy it lends to their
causes, and the media coverage that the cases receive have shown
substantial results. Though it is often difficult to effectively
implement all of the Court's rulings, factors that come out of its
decisions do lead to real social empowerment and change.
Notes and References
1 . Officially, the
case is Tukaram v. State of Maharashtra (1979) 2 SCC 143, but is
most commonly known as the Mathura rape case, and is one of the
most frequently referred to cases in India today.
2 . For a detailed
discussion of the emergency period, see J. DasGupta, 1978.
3 . Upendra Baxi
and Y. Vishnupriya both make a case for the birth of PIL as part of
a quest for legitimacy in the post-emergency period (Baxi 1987, 36, Vishnupriya 1995, 83-86). Baxi also
discusses judicial activism in the period before the
emergency.
4 . Examples of this
kind of thinking abound in the historiographies of subaltern
studies. See R. Guha, ed. 1997. A Subaltern
Studies Reader 1986-1995.
5 . For example,
the courts are now weighing conflicting public interests much more
carefully before entertaining writ petitions for hearing. See Kapur and Mehta 1999, 172.
6 . For a thorough
examination of the relaxation of these rules, see Chaturvedi 1984 'Liberalizing the
Requirement of Standing in Public Interest Litigation.'
7 .When the
doctrine of standing is used to reject a case, it should be noted
that this is most often done with no consideration of the actual
merits of the case (Cunningham, 1987,
498).
8 . Also see Cunningham for a discussion of distinctions
between representative standing and class action (500).
9 . See Antony also for briefs on nearly every landmark
judgement in PIL through 1992 along with a brief history of
PIL.
10 .For a very
thorough discussion of article 32 and its constitutional remedies
for the enforcement of fundamental rights, see Durga Das Basu's
Introduction to the Constitution of India, pp.121-124. Included is
also the important distinction between High Court and Supreme
Court.
11 . Sati is the
Hindu practice in which a wife joins her dead husband on his
funeral pyre.
12 . See Agnes, 1993 and Gangoli, 1998 for details.
13 . For further
elaboration of these articles of the constitution, see Basu 1997.
14 . In this
ruling, Delhi Domestic Working Women's Forum vs. Union of India
& Others [1994(4) SCALE 608], the Court discusses the situation
of tribal women in Bihar as well as the general situation of women
all over the country.
15 . These cases
often involve such issues as gang rapes, the rape of nuns of
children, and other such extreme situations.
16 . See P.
Rathinam versus State of Gujarat, [1987(2) SCALE 1464], order dated
December 7, 1987.
17 . All details
of this case are from four different articles published on February
1, 2000 in The Hindustan Times, The Times of India, The Hindu, and
The Statesman.
18 . See (1997) 6
Supreme Court Cases 241; Vishaka and Others vs. State of Rajasthan
and Others.
19 . It does not
include for instance, forced labour in prisons or conscription at
times of war.
20 . This
decision, written by Justice Bhagwati and Justice Reddy on July 31,
1981 [1981(3) SCALE 1136], is the first of several orders relating
to this particular case.
21 . This
information is courtesy of the Department of Women and Child
Development in the Government of India's Ministry of Human Resource
Development.
22 .A good
example of this is the history surrounding the US Supreme Court's
Brown v. Board of Education ruling ordering the integration of
schools. For details, see Patterson 2001.
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